Giving needle-free flu vaccines a shot - C&EN Global Enterprise (ACS

Autumn is here: Time to get a flu shot. But that seasonal jab in the arm may someday be history. Some less invasive immunization options are already a...
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VACCINES

Giving needle-free flu vaccines a shot Despite a setback in developing injectionfree delivery methods, some strategies are showing promise

Could new delivery methods one day make flu shots a thing of the past?

SARAH WEBB, special to C&EN

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live strains used in the vaccine don’t replicate as well as ones used in earlier years. A spokesperson from AstraZeneca, MedImmune’s parent company, notes that the company’s investigation continues. An advantage of FluMist was that it didn’t require a poke. The prospect of getting a jab is one barrier to vaccination for some people, along with the time, cost, and overall access to the medication. And deliver antigens that provoke the body to produce protective antibodies, the vaccines needlestick injuries to health care professionals are “a major problem, particularly contain a weakened live virus instead of an in places in the world which have limited inactivated (killed) virus like the injected resources,” Treanor says. flu shots do. This approach can trigger a One possible solution is a flu vaccine strong immune response in the respiratory tract, particularly in children, who have had that people can take orally, Treanor notes. Researchers are genetically tweaking adelimited past exposure to the flu. noviruses, widely used as vaccine carriers, First licensed by the U.S. Food & Drug to express the relevant influenza virus Administration in 2003, MedImmune’s proteins. Such viruses can be administered FluMist appeared to work for several in a tablet, for example. Then they repliyears. But an advisory committee for CDC cate in the gut and stimulate a protective advised against using the inhaled vaccine immune response in during the 2016–17 mucosal tissues that season, and again this line the stomach and year, after reviewing intestines. studies suggesting that A different neethe vaccine has lost its dle-free option—one punch. (Versions of the that uses an inactivatvaccine are still recomed virus—is a device mended for use in Candeveloped by Pharada and in Europe.) maJet to administer What happened with the vaccine Afluria. FluMist is still unclear, Approved by FDA in but researchers are interested in the answers, —Mark Prausnitz, Georgia Tech 2014 for most adults, a spring-powered, handsays John J. Treanor, held injector shoots the vaccine through a vaccine and infectious disease expert the skin and into the muscle via a narrow, at the University of Rochester School of precise fluid stream with pressure that Medicine & Dentistry. One thing scientists sometimes feels like the snap of a rubber have discovered is that some of the recent

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utumn is here: Time to get a flu shot. But that seasonal jab in the arm may someday be history. Some less invasive immunization options are already available, and other developments now in clinical testing could make flu vaccines more effective and convenient.

Vaccines for many infectious diseases confer long-term immunity with one shot or a series of injections, but researchers haven’t yet found a universal vaccine for the many viral strains that cause influenza. Instead, as flu viruses rapidly mutate, public health organizations decide each season which strains are likely to predominate. Producers then manufacture vaccines based on those guidelines. This means shots are only partially protective and must be administered every year. Some years the shot is more effective than others: In the 2014–15 season, people who received the shot were only 19% less likely to get sick than those who didn’t. By comparison, in 2010–11, the effectiveness was 60%, according to the U.S. Centers for Disease Control & Prevention (CDC). Although these vaccines are still crucial for preventing widespread illness and controlling outbreaks, clinicians and public health experts would like to have better tools to deliver vaccines and fight the influenza virus.

No more needles Fifteen years ago, inhaled vaccines looked like a promising strategy to handle the flu. In addition to offering a new way to

The microneedle patch “is a much easier, straightforward way to give vaccines in the skin.”

NOVEMBER 6, 2017 | CEN.ACS.ORG | C&EN

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Patching up the vaccine

verse events were minor, with more itchiness among people who received the patch and more pain and soreness among people who received traditional injections. Both the intramuscular vaccine and the patch contained the same dose of three viral strains: two influenza A strains and one influenza B strain. While the immune response to the A strains was comparable across delivery methods, those who received the patch vaccine had approximately double the immune response to the B strain compared with the intramuscular group. The microneedle patch “is a much easier, straightforward way to give vaccines in the skin, and so that may be able

Another approach that could make vaccines easier to administer and potentially more effective is a move toward immunizations into skin, rather than muscle. FDA has approved one intradermal vaccine for the flu, Fluzone ID. It is still delivered via syringe, but with a 90% smaller needle, so it’s easier to administer and creates less waste. It offers comparable immunity to that of intramuscular vaccines. Skin offers a rich environment for generating an immune response, says Mark R. Prausnitz, a chemical engineer at Georgia Institute of Technology. Because this tissue already serves as a primary barrier between humans and all sorts of pathogens, skin is primed to generate a wider array of protective immune responses than those generated within the muscle. to open the door to harPrausnitz has develGeorgia Tech’s Mark nessing the skin’s immunoloped a small patch with Prausnitz holds a ogy to get better immune microneedles to deliver microneedle patch that responses,” Prausnitz says. inactivated virus into the delivers a flu vaccine. Micron Biomedical, of skin. The dissolvable, which Prausnitz is cofounder and chief cone-shaped microneedles—100 of them scientific officer, has licensed the techarranged in a 1-cm2 array—are made of a combination of sucrose and polyvinyl alco- nology to develop flu vaccines for further clinical testing. His lab, meanwhile, is hol that encapsulates inactivated flu antideveloping this technology for other ingen. As the patch is applied with the press fectious disease threats in the developing of a thumb, the conical needles penetrate the outer layer of the skin, and the backing world such as polio, measles, and rubella, clicks to indicate that the microneedles are an endeavor supported by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. in place. The microneedles settle into the Someday a flu vaccination could be as skin and separate from the patch, turning into a soft gel as they further absorb. Leav- simple as applying a patch or swallowing a medicine. But as the ongoing situation ing the patch on for 20 minutes is suffiwith FluMist demonstrates, the influenza cient to deliver the vaccine. One big advantage this less invasive sys- virus is an unpredictable foe. It could be a while before developers can demonstrate tem offers is that the patches don’t need in large studies that these new flu vaccine to be kept cold; the microneedle material strategies are effective, the University of keeps the vaccine stable for at least two Rochester’s Treanor says. “I don’t see any years at temperatures up to 40 °C, and of these things as being really licensed for the patch can be self-administered. This many years.” simple storage could make it much easier to reach people in underdeveloped areas. After obtaining promising results with the Sarah Webb is a freelance writer. This patch in animal testing, Prausnitz’s team story first appeared in June reported results from a small clinin ACS Central ical safety trial of 100 people (Lancet 2017, Science: cenm.ag/ DOI: 10.1016/S0140-6736(17)30575-5). Adflu-vaccine.

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band, says PharmaJet Chief Operating Officer Chris Cappello. Its distribution will expand from hundreds to thousands of locations during the 2017–18 flu season, he adds.